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Israeli officials denounced as “political” Wednesday attempts by a Turkish court to secure an international arrest warrant for four former Israeli military commanders over a deadly 2010 maritime assault.

But the court ruling, issued on Monday, was unlikely to have a “significant effect” on attempts to restore full diplomatic relations between Israel and Turkey, which were badly damaged by the raid, officials said.

“Of course we’re not happy about it. It seems more political than legal,” said Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon during a tour of the Jordan Valley on Tuesday, in remarks relayed by his office.

“We were ready to set things right with Turkey and regulate relations with them,” he said.

“There is unfortunately no ripeness on the Turkish side to make things better, and this event is part of the campaign, which is being conducted for Turkish domestic political reasons, among others.”

Moshe Ya’alon at the Knesset on March 11, 2014 (photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Israel and Turkey have been locked in more than a year of talks over compensation for the deaths of what was initially nine Turks in the deadly Israeli raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla in May 2010.

The number rose to 10 last week after one of the injured, who had been in a coma, died, a Turkish NGO said.

The Istanbul court is to ask Interpol to alert police forces around the word to the arrest warrants, but Israeli foreign ministry sources told Maariv newspaper it was unlikely that the international police body would take the request seriously.

“Interpol is a professional body that does not cooperate with political pranks,” one source said, adding that the court move was unlikely to affect the reconciliation deal.

It “will not have a significant effect on the efforts being made in the two countries to reach a reconciliation agreement, although the latest development in the trial will now serve as another factor that will delay its signing,” he said.

The court ruling is part of an ongoing criminal trial in absentia of the four men on charges brought by Turkish NGO IHH and the victims’ families in 2012.

Compensation talks began a year ago after Israel extended a formal apology to Turkey, with the Israeli government reportedly prepared to offer $20 million in compensation to the families of those killed and wounded in the raid.